Alrighty, so we had a great hatch and they all DIED! They started hatching around 3:30 PM, and were still hatching at 5:00 PM.
I left them under the microscope and did another 1 frame per minute time lapse video...it didn't turn out all that well so I'm not going to post it. What I DID get was 3 videos of the larvae actually hatching out of the eggs. The first one is shot at 1 frame per second (4 seconds of video = 1 minute), the 2nd two are shot at 1 frame per 5 seconds (4 seconds of video = 5 minutes).
http://www.cichlidrecipe.com/nanoreef/mandarin_hatch1.avi
http://www.cichlidrecipe.com/nanoreef/mandarin_hatch2.avi
http://www.cichlidrecipe.com/nanoreef/mandarin_hatch3.avi
So I came back to the microscope after letting it shoot another time lapse of a larvae that was still in the egg at 5:30...while the video's quality isn't sufficient to show here, basically what happens is the larvae appears to have died, and within a couple hours turns into a white crumped mass instead of hatching. In fact, it appears that MANY of the larvae die at varying stages before hatching and quickly decompose. Food for thought.
Anyway, I was hoping to maybe put the larvae that had hatched in with the GBG larvae, but leaving them in the container with all the dead (and decomposing eggs) must have killed them all off...I had a bunch of non-moving larvae sitting on the bottom of the little container.
I took a picture that pretty much will give you an idea of how many actually hatched vs. how many eggs were in there. It was by all prior experience, a relatively "VERY GOOD HATCH"! I literally did NOTHING other than get 99%+ of the parental water out from the eggs, and placed all the eggs in the small enclosed container. No circulation, no nothing, and a freakin' TINY container, and I get one of the best hatches to date. This literally makes no sense and blows most of the theories out of the water. I'm stumped.
There are many more eggs off to the perimeter of the circular container...most of the larvae were concentrated in the center. Also note the unhatched eggs with DEAD white larvae in them. These were shot at 10X with the QX5 + my LED flashlight providing additional light from the front and slightly above...it really makes a big difference in what the microscope is able to pick up (good for future refernce).
MP